Evidence of meeting #41 for Canadian Heritage in the 40th Parliament, 2nd Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was apology.

A recording is available from Parliament.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

Clerk of the Committee  Mr. Richard Dupuis

11:45 a.m.

Conservative

Paul Calandra Conservative Oak Ridges—Markham, ON

To get back to the amendment, Mr. Chair, I've done some research, because I took to heart what Mr. Angus said about maybe getting down into the bill a bit further. As you can tell, I've done a little bit of research on this and I'm going to go through some of this over the next little while, and hopefully that can lead to some friendly discussions and we'll see how it goes from there.

Initially, on some of the background I was looking at, we had heard a lot about the agreement that was signed in principle by the previous government. I did find in an article of October 14, Angelo Persichilli said, “Prime Minister Martin confirmed that $2.5 million has been earmarked” in this agreement in principle, and it was signed by Raymond Chan in the presence of Pierre Pettigrew, and signed by the Prime Minister, and the heritage minister was there. The article goes on to say “However, PM Martin—unlike then-PM Brian Mulroney did in 1990—offered no apology from the Federal Government to those who suffered those injustices.”

I note that simultaneously, when the announcement was being made, there was another announcement being made by the immigration minister in Toronto, Minister Volpe, with respect to that particular agreement. Minister Volpe decided he would focus more on the importance of the Italian community to Canada and all of the successes that they brought to Canada. But there was something I read: “Satisfaction has been expressed by NCIC President Dominic Campione”—you'll remember him as one of the witnesses who we had here in front of us. He said, and I quote:

“This is a historic date for our community, the day when the important task of educating this and the future generations on the evolution of our community in Canada.” The internment of Italians during World War II “is a dark page in Canadian history, and the agreement in principle,” maintained Campione, “gives our community an opportunity to make sure that such events are never forgotten and, most of all, never repeated.”

He described that agreement, which gave them $2.5 million, as historic. I searched and searched and I could not find anywhere where the NCIC and Mr. Campione were suggesting that an apology was actually needed. I really did a lot of searching for that, Mr. Chair. I couldn't find anywhere where they suggested that an apology was required.

I did some additional research, and I'll share it with you because I know you're interested, Mr. Chair. “In November 2005, Italian Canadian representatives signed an agreement-in-principle with the federal government...” Again $2.5 million. Who signed? “A representative of the National Congress of Italian Canadians”, and it goes on to tell the others. Again, to quote, “'This is an historic day for our community,' said Dominic Campione” of the $2.5 million that they received.

I was able to find, going back, some of the press releases at the time.

11:50 a.m.

Conservative

Dean Del Mastro Conservative Peterborough, ON

A point of order.

I just want to clarify the record. No $2.5 million was in fact ever paid to the NCIC. It was a contract that was signed, an unfunded contract to establish an endowment that was never actually established. I just want to correct the member on that.

11:50 a.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Gary Schellenberger

Thank you for that correction.

11:50 a.m.

Conservative

Paul Calandra Conservative Oak Ridges—Markham, ON

He is quite right. It was actually just an agreement in principle that was never fulfilled.

On November 12, 2005, Citizenship and Immigration stated:

The Government of Canada and the Italian Canadian Community have developed this Agreement-in-Principle, premised on the principles of ‘no compensation’ and ‘no apology’...It is the intention of both parties that a final agreement...will be concluded as soon as possible.

It adds that the Government of Canada plans to provide $2.5 million. This is from a government press release. Sorry, I'm not sure if I said it was November 12, 2005, from a previous government press release. It goes on to say:

This Agreement-in-Principle shall not be interpreted as a full and final agreement nor as constituting an admission by the Government of Canada of the existence of any legal obligation of the Government of Canada nor as foregoing/limiting any person(s) right to advance or initiate an action/claim against the Government of Canada, nor shall this Agreement-in-Principle be interpreted by any of the signatories as representing the interests of all Italian Canadians.

I'll read that again. It says, “nor shall this Agreement-in-Principle”--the one they're talking about is the one by the previous government--“be interpreted by any of the signatories as representing the interests of all Italian Canadians.” So what they're saying is that the NCIC does not speak for all Italian Canadians.

I found another article, actually, that was in an Italian Canadian magazine. Again it expresses the $2.5 million that was provided as part of the initial framework. They were excited because they were “'looking for worthy projects that will fulfil our mandate', Campione said. The timetable: a detailed and approved program ready for project submissions....” The money will be used, he went on to say, to acknowledge and educate people with respect to what happened during the internment.

I found another one about Italian Canadians in history. It's from a magazine called Fusion. Again it talks about the $2.5 million that was part of that potential agreement, and again, I quote from Mr. Campione:

“This is an historic day for our community: we begin the important task of educating present and future generations about the evolution of the Italian community in Canada,” says Dominic Campione, president of the National Congress of Italian Canadians. “The internment of Italians during the Second World War is a dark page in Canadian history, and this agreement-in-principle allows our community the ability to ensure not only that these events will never be forgotten, but that they will never be repeated.”

I will skip these pages. I won't table them. They're about donations to the Liberal Party, but I'll skip over that.

Canadian Heritage had a press release again on November 12, 2005, and again there is a quote from Mr. Campione for the NCIC that suggests that it was an historic day to have received an acknowledgement and some potential to have $2.5 million from the Government of Canada--an historic day that did not include an apology of any kind.

There's another one again on Saturday, November 12. This was in a Halifax paper. It said that Dominic Campione, president of the National Congress of Italian Canadians, said that the internment of Italians during the Second World War “is a dark page in Canadian history, and the agreement in principle” allows “our community” the ability to ensure not only that these events will never be forgotten, but that they will never be repeated.

Again, that was based on no apology, no compensation, and $2.5 million, as opposed to the $5 million that our CHRP program has actually put forward.

Then all of a sudden on March 23, the new president of the NCIC suggested that the original agreement--the $2.5 million--was what they were looking for. He said, of the government's new approach, which would see $5 million to community historical recognition, “The Italian Canadian community cannot accept a settlement that is less, both in monetary terms and in the modalities of implementation, than what was agreed upon through the ACE program.”

Again, there is no mention of an apology. So the new president was very specific. I disagree with him, because I think the $5 million that was announced through our CHRP program is more reflective than the $2.5 million. I think it can give us a lot better recognition than the—

11:55 a.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Gary Schellenberger

Mr. Calandra, could you give me the date on that particular...?

11:55 a.m.

Conservative

Paul Calandra Conservative Oak Ridges—Markham, ON

It was March 23, 2009.

I notice too, Mr. Chair, that the heritage committee in the 38th Parliament was also seized of this. At the time, it was Minister Chan who stated for the record that the government would not apologize because he had legal opinions that suggested that it opened the government up to legal liability, and therefore there would be no apology forthcoming from the previous government.

If you'll bear with me, I'll read you some of the things Mr. Chan said: “We cannot compensate people. That would be opening the taxpayer to unlimited liability, for...future generations.” He also said “that while it's important to honour those who were subject to racist policies of the past, it would be irresponsible to open the door to compensation.” “However, Chan argues that once the door to compensation is opened, anyone can take the government for whatever they...can get.”

Chan argued that there was an issue of liability because the government of the day had formally apologized. He was talking about another apology, actually, at that point.

The CRRF, the Canadian Race Relations Foundation, commented on November 15, 2005, on the previous agreement. They noted that the package announced by the government of the day, the Martin government, does not include an apology or compensation. The quote was, “If the Italian-Canadian community, and particularly those who were interned, is satisfied with the agreement-in-principle and the eventual provisions of an agreement, then the CRRF celebrates with them.... Our policy is to support the wishes of the community in this manner.” That was from Paul Winn, talking about the $2.5 million previous agreement and the fact that there would be no apology and no compensation.

I found some pictures from the signing ceremony a number of years ago for that agreement, which had no apology, no compensation, and was for $2.5 million. There were a lot of smiling faces, including that of the member who has sponsored this particular bill. He doesn't seem to be too frustrated about the lack of an apology or compensation. There are a lot of smiling faces there, but again no apology, no compensation. That seems to have been fine at the time.

I'll skip over that. There are some more pictures of the happy, smiling faces at that meeting.

But then later, on January 5, I found that it would appear that Prime Minister Martin had also offered an apology to Italian Canadians, believe it or not, Mr. Chair.

On January 5, 2005, “Martin's...apology appeared to also include Italian-Canadians interned in the Second World War, and Ukrainian-Canadians interned during the First World War.” He said:

“Sadly there are examples in our history, including the Ukrainians and the Italians. They all had terrible experiences,” Martin said while discussing the head-tax issue.

However, the Prime Minister was rebuked by Minister Chan, who then said, “I commend the Prime Minister for apologizing” and added:

“My reason for not apologizing is because of the legal position that was given to me by my department.... And as a minister I rely on my department for advice. And if it's not the case, if there's no legal consequences, then I would...apologize.”

But his department had told him that there was an issue. I searched and I searched late into the night last night, Mr. Chair, to see remarks of individuals who were parliamentarians in January 2005 expressing their outrage that Prime Minister Martin had given a second apology to the Italian people outside of the House, and ironically I just couldn't find them.

I couldn't find anything from any member of the then-government. I think there was a statement from a Conservative, though; it was just about their timing.

One thing I did find was when that agreement in 2005 was announced, there was a Canadian who had been interned, who was there, a Mr. Capobianco, who declared that it was too much, too little, too late, and that he intended to vote Conservative. So he's a very insightful guy of that particular agreement.

I took a section about Italians from the Encyclopedia of Canada's Peoples, and for a number of pages it talks about all the good things the Italian people have brought to this country. It talks about the internment. In the encyclopedia it says:

The Congress also took up the issue of wrongful treatment and internment of Italian Canadians during World War II, for which it received an official apology from the Prime Minister in 1990, and a promise to redress the damages suffered by the community. Although it is relatively young in comparison with organizations...in a short time the National Congress of Italian Canadians has proven to be an effective vehicle....

So they did get an apology. Again I searched and I couldn't find an addendum or an amendment to that insert in the Canadian encyclopedia that suggested the NCIC or the Italian community was upset at that apology by the Prime Minister of Canada, or the subsequent apology of Prime Minister Martin.

Then I found something in the Toronto Star. We all know the Toronto Star is not usually the paper that individuals such as I, a Conservative, would read, but they had an article about apologizing. It is by Bruce Campion-Smith. He talks about landmark apologies in Canadian history. He talks about Prime Minister Harper's landmark apology to thousands of Chinese Canadians and he also talked about November 4, 1990, when Prime Minister Mulroney issued a formal apology to Italian Canadians.

He goes on to talk about the apology that the Prime Minister...he called it a landmark apology in Canadian history, Mr. Chair.

The reason I brought all that up, Mr. Chair, is because we have to know what an apology is all about. I had to do some research. How do we accept apologies? What are apologies? What is the definition of an apology? When should an apology be given?

I was able to find a very extensive report tabled on December 11, 2007. The title of the paper is A Time for Apologies: The Legal and Ethical Implications of Apologies in Civil Cases. It's a very good research paper, Mr. Chair. I'm going to read some of the aspects of an apology because it gets to the heart of what Mr. Angus was saying. If we're going to be discussing potential amendments, it's important to set the stage with what happened before and understand what the appropriate elements of an apology are, what needs to be included in an apology if it's going to be accepted by people, so that in the future we don't have to go down the same road, and some people accept the apology and others don't. Clearly, two Prime Ministers have apologized, and that hasn't been enough for some people.

I've done some research. This is some riveting stuff, Mr. Chair, which I'm sure you'll find will be very interesting to you and other members of the committee for when we decide on our amendments—if there are going to be any.

As much as possible I'll reference the people who wrote it. She, the author, writes:

In order to ensure that an apology satisfies both the needs of victims and wrongdoers, this Paper proposes that the parties engage in an “apology process” that involves four fundamental steps: determine the needs and expectations of the victims in relation to an apology; determine the needs and expectations of the apologizer; mediate the apology between the parties; and support the delivery of the apology.

I'll read it again, just because I know this is pretty important stuff here.

12:05 p.m.

Conservative

Dean Del Mastro Conservative Peterborough, ON

It's not in this bill.

12:05 p.m.

Conservative

Paul Calandra Conservative Oak Ridges—Markham, ON

This is the important point:

Determine the needs and expectations of the victims in relation to an apology; determine the needs and expectations of the apologizer; mediate the apology between the parties; and support the delivery of the apology.

This bill says nothing about it. It doesn't fulfill any of those elements in any way, shape, or form. I would suggest to you, Mr. Chair, that the apology given by Prime Minister Mulroney in fact did meet all of these four elements. I would also note that it was the NCIC at the time that invited the Prime Minister to speak in front of them so he could deliver this apology, after they had negotiated and talked about what they expected in the apology.

Professor Nicholas Tavuchis, a Canadian sociologist reduces an authentic apology to two fundamentals: being sorry for harm done to another, and then saying so.

And Prime Minister Mulroney fulfilled those two qualities.

Law Professor Daniel Shuman, drawing on the works of others, concludes: “Minimally, to be meaningful, an apology must express regret for the occurrence of a harmful event and acknowledge responsibility for it.”

Again, the apology of Mr. Mulroney did that.

Dr. Aaron Lazare, a psychiatrist and author of the influential book On Apology

—he wrote a book on apology—

cites four principal components of an apology: acknowledging the offence, communicating remorse, providing explanations, and making reparations.

Of course, the Mulroney apology did that, and again through the CHRP we've made reparations and we can go on.

She goes on in this paper to talk about the seven core elements of an apology. Now who would have ever thought, Mr. Chair, that there would be so much involvement with respect to an apology? When you're talking about emotional issues and you're talking about asking the Prime Minister of a country or the government of a country to apologize for something, clearly we have to know what we're apologizing for and we have to know that the apology contains all the elements of an appropriate apology.

I would note that the opposition is led by a professor, so he might want to also review some of these elements in helping draft some amendments for the member. I guess it would have been a lot easier had our motion for a 30-day extension been actually granted, but I note it wasn't, so we're going to have to flesh this out here.

The seven core elements of an apology are: recognition which involves identification of the wrong, acknowledgement of the violation of a norm, and appreciation of the extent of the harm done to the victim; remorse which includes genuine expressions relating to regret for the harm that occurred; responsibility which acknowledges that the wrongdoer did harm to the victim; repentance which includes attitudes and behaviours including regret, shame, humility...; reasons which are explanations...; reparation or restitution...; and reform.

Again, all of that was done by the Prime Minister. Indeed, many of the elements, including the withdrawal of the War Measures Act and all the other elements were done by Prime Minister Mulroney.

Prime Minister Mulroney has met all of those. Granted, Prime Minister Martin did not. He didn't meet all of those criteria, but his was done in a different context.

I must say this about Prime Minister Martin. I don't doubt his sincerity when he was making that apology. I assume he was being very sincere to the Italian people, and I have a great deal of respect for the office of the Prime Minister. When a Prime Minister apologizes for something, I tend to believe.

Now it goes on. There's also something here called the response to harm continuum:

The Response to Harm Continuum comprises the following responses: validation in which the speaker acknowledges/confirms the victim’s experience...; expression of benevolence which is an empathetic expression to the victim about the harm; expression of sympathy by which the speaker is affected by feelings consistent with the victim’s or shows compassion; statement of belief in which the speaker expresses belief in the victim’s story and confirms the victim’s integrity; acknowledgement of fact that includes both acceptance of what a victim has described as well as acceptance of information from other sources; an explanation...; an expression of regret...; sorry statement...; commemoration...; acknowledgement of responsibility....

Those are all important elements in leading up to creating an appropriate apology, which of course were all done by Prime Minister Mulroney, with the NCIC, before he was invited to speak to them and issue this apology. I did mention that the NCIC at the time invited Prime Minister Mulroney to offer the apology to them after they had negotiated for some time with respect to what the apology would say.

The following questions, though, Mr. Chair, are very important.

The following questions should be asked when formulating an apology:

These are very important.

Who are the givers and receivers of apologies? Apologies have the greatest potential impact if they are delivered by the actual wrongdoer or wrongdoers.

Mr. Capobianco, who I referenced earlier, who had been interned, rejected the assertions by the previous government that they close the book.

Here are some other questions:

What are actual circumstances surrounding the harm? The apology must articulate these clearly.

Why is the apology being offered? The reasons must be...articulated.

When is the best time to apologize? Apologies offered within a reasonable time have the best chance of meaningful impact.

As you know, in my speech in the House, and earlier, I noted that it's been over 60 years, and there were six previous prime ministers who had an opportunity to apologize and they refused to do that. So there's been a lot of time in between. But thankfully, Mr. Mulroney did make his apology in 1990.

Where should the apology be offered - in private or in a public forum? Survivors usually call for two kinds of apologies: a personal, private apology, and/or an official, public apology.

How should an apology be offered? Whether it is oral or a written statement should be determined by the needs of the victim.

So the victims themselves should be deciding how an apology should be provided.

Unfortunately, right now there are no victims. I could be wrong on this, but I don't think there are any survivors of the internment around.

The concern that apologies are withheld because of concerns about legal liability has prompted the passage of apology legislation in various jurisdictions around the world.

--including here.

Traditionally, lawyers for both plaintiffs and defendants in civil cases have been resistant to apologies because they perceive that apologies may result in monetary settlements unfavourable to their clients.

In...common law jurisdictions in North America, the basic rule of evidence is that apologies may be used as admissions against interest and may be used as evidence to establish liability on the part of the wrongdoer.

It's very important. This bill here, Mr. Chair, asks for an apology but doesn't limit liability in any way, shape, or form. It opens the door to all kinds of things that clearly we're going to need to tighten up.

She goes on to say in her report that:

Apologies have not traditionally played a leading role in adjudicative processes. It is feared that apologies and other statements of regret will be treated as admissions of liability in Court. The conventional wisdom is that any statement that expresses or implies responsibility may be treated in litigation as an admission of liability.

She goes on to talk about government apologies. She says:

Government public apologies often fall short. Such apologies are rarely spontaneous, are too formal and insincere and are often too generic. Governments tend to resist apologies for the actions of past governments and distant historical injustices and are concerned about the legal implications.

So basically what she's saying here is that the apology offered by Mr. Mulroney going to the people after having negotiated with the NCIC, and being invited by them, was a much more personal apology and something that fits better with how an actual apology should be done.

I'll go on. There are some other very important elements here.

That was just in the executive summary. Now I'm getting to the actual report itself, Mr. Chair.

12:10 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Gary Schellenberger

It's exhaustive. It's very good work being done here.

12:10 p.m.

Conservative

Paul Calandra Conservative Oak Ridges—Markham, ON

Just bear with me. I just want to get to the pages...because I know how important it is that we actually do this. I wish we would have had those extra 30 days, Mr. Chair, but we don't, so we'll see what we can do.

In simple terms, “an apology is a speech act, a form of oral communication from one party to another designed to carry out several specific simultaneous communicative and moral functions.”

That's what she initially says is a definition of apology.

I really took to heart what Mr. Angus said over the last couple of days.

December 3rd, 2009 / 12:20 p.m.

Bloc

Carole Lavallée Bloc Saint-Bruno—Saint-Hubert, QC

Are you going on?

12:20 p.m.

Conservative

Paul Calandra Conservative Oak Ridges—Markham, ON

I am, and I know you're interested.

12:20 p.m.

Bloc

Carole Lavallée Bloc Saint-Bruno—Saint-Hubert, QC

[Inaudible--Editor]

12:20 p.m.

Conservative

Paul Calandra Conservative Oak Ridges—Markham, ON

I know, Mr. Chair, the members opposite talked about my parents, and I will get into that because I think I can summarize what I'm saying by explaining some of the experiences of my own family. So I appreciate the honourable member asking me to share some more of that.

I've downloaded some pictures to my BlackBerry that Mr. Angus had asked for, because when I saw these other pictures I thought--

12:20 p.m.

NDP

Charlie Angus NDP Timmins—James Bay, ON

It's not relevant to why we're here.

12:20 p.m.

Conservative

Paul Calandra Conservative Oak Ridges—Markham, ON

I think explaining an apology is very relevant, because that's what we're doing here.

12:20 p.m.

Bloc

Carole Lavallée Bloc Saint-Bruno—Saint-Hubert, QC

What you are doing is filibustering.

12:20 p.m.

Conservative

Paul Calandra Conservative Oak Ridges—Markham, ON

Here we go:

There are obvious shortcomings associated with people other than the perpetrator issuing apologies.

This is important. I'll read it again, because I'm not sure everybody heard it.

There are obvious shortcomings associated with people other than the perpetrator issuing apologies. The person in authority may not have been in power at the time of the wrongdoing and may have no or little connection with the events in question.

I take it by this statement that any bill that doesn't include a formal apology by the leader of the Liberal Party at the time, for the injustices of six previous Liberal prime ministers, would be insufficient in actually living up to all of the terms of a real apology. How can you have an apology that doesn't include an apology by the Liberal Party for having first interned Italian Canadians and identifying them as enemy aliens? And how can you then excuse Prime Ministers St. Laurent, Pearson, Trudeau, Turner, Chrétien, and...I'll take Prime Minister Martin off the list, because he did apologize actually. I thought he hadn't, but research tells me he has, so I'll take him off that list for now.

Still, this bill is going to have to be changed, if we go forward, to have an explicit apology, I would suggest, by the current leader of the Liberal Party to the Italian people for the injustices and for ignoring the Italian people for over 60 years with respect to an apology.

It goes on further and says:

An apology delivered from someone who is remote from the events may be more susceptible to a poor reaction. Expressions of sympathy or regret, for example, may be viewed as being strategic rather than sincere.

Now, that's interesting, because I've talked about the “strategicness” of this bill and how it splits the community and how it probably would have been better done when there was a majority government as opposed to a minority government. As is so often the case.... I sometimes feel bad for the Liberals that they only had four majority governments and they didn't get the fifth, because I know this is something they would have brought forward if they had only gotten that extra majority government.

I did note, and I will say this for my friend Mr. Angus, that the NDP did bring forward a motion in 2007. So they actually were seized with this. I could find no evidence of something like this ever having been brought forward by any Liberal members before this time, but as Tavuchis, who is a professor I talked about earlier, suggests:

The principal function...of all collective apologizing...has little to do with sorrow or sincerity but rather with putting things on the public record.

That's what he talks about when sometimes you bring an apology in a format that doesn't fit the test of an apology, unlike the apology that was given by Prime Minister Mulroney to the people at the request of the NCIC, who invited him to attend and speak. In fact, I'm told they brought in a lot more people at that function, a lot of other agencies and a lot of other groups that represent Italians. They felt that was an historic moment, so they wanted a lot of Italians to hear that.

Now, Martha Minnow cautions:

Forgiveness is a power held by the victimized, not a right to be claimed. The ability to dispense, but also to withhold, forgiveness is an ennobling capacity and part of the dignity to be reclaimed by those who survive the wrongdoing. Even an individual survivor who chooses to forgive, cannot, properly, forgive in the name of other victims. To expect survivors to forgive is to heap yet another burden on them.

So what Ms. Minnow, who is an acclaimed scholar in apologies, is suggesting is that nobody can claim to speak for all communities. Only the wronged do; only the victims can speak or accept an apology. So it would be absolutely impossible, as was suggested here by some of the witnesses, to suggest that they speak on behalf of all Italians, because that, certainly, would not meet the test of an appropriate apology that would stand the test of time and that would actually heal the wrongs.

Indeed, if there are no survivors—and I think there are none—this apology or any apology, as not really outlined in the bill, won't meet the test of time and will be open to future claims.

Professor Lazare describes the healing process and how an apology can promote healing. The professor said:

[W]hat makes an apology work is the exchange of shame and power between the offender and the offended. By apologizing, you take the shame of your offense and redirect it to yourself. You admit to hurting or diminishing someone and, in effect, say that you are really the one who is diminished--I'm the one who was wrong, mistaken, insensitive, or stupid. In acknowledging your shame you give the offended the power to forgive. The exchange is at the heart of the healing process.

Now, it is unfortunate that for 60 years the Liberals ignored the survivors and refused to make the apology, so we can't now have that level of forgiveness that will be needed, because there are no victims. But thankfully, Prime Minister Mulroney, in 1990, took the initiative, negotiated with the NCIC, was invited to address them and to apologize, so we could have that level of healing that is so essential if any apology is to actually be effective.

And clearly we're asking the Parliament of Canada, the Prime Minister of Canada—the office of the Prime Minister, it doesn't matter who fills the seat—to make an apology, and so far I haven't seen that this bill meets any part of the essential elements of an effective apology.

Thankfully, Prime Minister Mulroney has met all of these obligations.

The author went on to talk in this report.... And I'm not going to read, because I think my honourable friend did a great job the other day of explaining why other apologies were different. The author goes into the Canadian residential schools, and she talks about our first nations and the head tax and why they are different and why they required a different type of an apology. She goes into great depth. I can read it if the members would like me to. But I might reference that a bit later, because I don't want to take up all the time. I might reference it a little bit later, but I'll put it aside for now, and if I have time left at the end when I summarize about my family, then I'll get back to it.

But there are some other elements here that I think are so important in how we're going to amend or change or maybe even defeat the bill so that we can come up.... Again, Mr. Chair, I do leave an olive branch open. I wish the member had come to one of the two Italians who are actually on the government side and talked about this first, because we might have avoided a lot of the problems with this if we had taken it seriously and had a thoughtful approach, as Prime Minister Mulroney had, as opposed to rushing something through and trying to separate the community between Montreal and Toronto and Liberals and Conservatives. But anyway, we can talk about that in a bit.

I'll just get on to some of the other important points of this. As I said, if you guys want me to read some of this, I can. It mentions ethical implications—

12:25 p.m.

Liberal

Pablo Rodriguez Liberal Honoré-Mercier, QC

Please, of course.

12:25 p.m.

Conservative

Paul Calandra Conservative Oak Ridges—Markham, ON

I don't want to disappoint my friend.

12:25 p.m.

NDP

Charlie Angus NDP Timmins—James Bay, ON

It's all going back to the House.

12:25 p.m.

Conservative

Paul Calandra Conservative Oak Ridges—Markham, ON

Actually, I'll get back to the ethical implications of inappropriate legislation and apology in a bit.

12:30 p.m.

NDP

Charlie Angus NDP Timmins—James Bay, ON

On a point of order, can the member just admit that this is a filibuster and that they're trying to walk the clock down so this will go back to the House unamended, unchanged, and the Conservatives will be standing to vote?

12:30 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Gary Schellenberger

I don't think that's necessarily a point of order, Mr. Angus.

12:30 p.m.

NDP

Charlie Angus NDP Timmins—James Bay, ON

Well it's a suggestion.